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tv   The Willis Report  FOX Business  August 27, 2013 6:00pm-7:01pm EDT

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we will see right back here tomorrow. charles is making your market coming up next. i will see you tomorrow. ♪ charles: hello, everyone. i'm charles payne. thank you for being with us on this very important hour. tonight on our fox business special, "making your market." we live in a world of instability and uncertainty. liquor was going on right now. the obama administration takes the line against this carnage and syria. >> tomorrow obscenity. charles: oil prices are spiking higher. the classic conundrum, i'm going to show you how. also a lot we can learn from the world's greatest investors, the investment gurus like warren buffett and peter lynch.
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the old school approach still work in today's stock market? i say some of the dozens of the doesn't. i will discuss. and i always say the stock market is a reflection of us, america, our hopes, our dreams, our hard work and successes, and our failures. even our dispositions. see what stocks in telling us about how we feel about our neighbors. also tonight, we will speak with the ceo of a company in the middle of rebuilding america piece by piece. the story of opportunity and hope and inspiration that just may be a potential investment for your portfolio. so sit up, get off the couch, stop listening to the doomsayers. i believe in outing great american companies, and i know you can make this your market. ♪ charles: few things spook the market as much as uncertainty and anxiety. we have a double those above. the certainty of a u.s.-led strike grew today, it was
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underscored by headlines like these. the "wall street journal" reporting u.s. allies are laying around for a strike against syria. fox is reporting u.s. forces could strike any time. there is the uncertainty of what will unleash from this sort of thing. desperate regime. of course bigtime defenders in russia and china. the growing ranks to over the war in washington about the debt ceiling and then a but continuing resolution. we never got any better, but it has been a beautiful year. where do we go from here? we will get it started right now senior equity strategist, founder of seaports securities and chief strategist of ballpoint asset management. first of all, you've seen a lot of up and down days. what do you make of today's session? >> it was a pretty ugly day, but not unexpected. and surprise to did go down more yesterday quite frankly after
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the secretary of state spoke. took a while. listen, the market does not like uncertainty. we got a lot of uncertainty. charles: what is more responsible? syria or the war brewing in washington d.c.? >> syria has to be number one. the war brewing in washington and then somehow or other the fed tapering is taking a back burner. charles: believe it or not. >> but clearly that is a problem. the next fed chairman, i think putting the other two aside and tell them determine if the next fed chairman will be, the market is on hold now matter what. charles: i see you nodding your head. give us your assessment. >> i actually don't think that the fed tapering had jumped out of the spotlight. i do think syria is an issue. i also believe that the debt ceiling is coming to the forefront. you said it earlier. all world as a world of
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computers. the markets are reflection, but you have to understand, more active type trader, and positioning myself adjusted for the potential of these risks to balloon into something bad. and i think right now fed number one, i do believe that. i think that that debt ceiling, were drawn to push it out obviously. but that bickering, that headline risk as to be factored in. home prices are up over 12 percent year-over-year. some folks said that is a nail in the coffin. that is why stocks continued breakdown. charles: the debt ceiling was a big deal. it did have a major impact on our markets last night. it even led to as losing a aaa rating. >> syria may be number one. clearly the debt ceiling. we seen the movie before. the market's going to wiggle. the republicans in the democrats are going to of the tow.
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charles: the american public, this resonates the american public seems indifferent. nothing that will be the cash -- the case. my goal is to encourage people to be owners, investors, not to be afraid. they have a lot of reason to be afraid to read a lot of people who get involved relied on the old school guys to have tremendous track records. i wanna talk about three things with you guys tonight. what they think about the market , their philosophies, and what mayor may not still be prominent in the current market. let's face it, the market has changed, the dynamics and characteristics. let's start with warren buffett. most famous quote, room number one is never lose money. listen, i'm with you, my man. it's like a perfect that i'm with you. rule number two is never forget roll number one. his investment style, he tries
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to predict where companies will be. is that still possible? >> absolutely. i can speak for anyone else on the panel tonight, but i recently gave a talk in north carolina. i was asked to talk about stocks, recommend stocks. 2004, and i was there just a few months ago. we still own 14 of the 18 stocks that i talked about in 2004. clearly i am a believer in the strategy and warren buffett. he tends to buy goods companies and he buys them when he is out of favor and there's blood in the streets. charles: you just talked about being a traitor. how can anyone know what will be a good company? would you buy any stock right now and put them in a lock box and now look at them? >> i have a problem. i tell you this, i do have a long-term vision to be level but part of my strategy, not buying anything something i will be comfortable owning.
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i think that the average investor sibila canal for the long term. don't get your short-term cloudy. if you buy for ten years because you believe it's on a turnaround, don't let an apple thought or oil prices hurt your long-term thesis as long as is not directly correlated. things are falling apart. factories. everything is still on track. i think that's what happened to the average investor. >> so many people out there are reluctant to buy things like general mills or nike are things that they use in their everyday life. i find it fascinating. watch this show last night. the nasdaq was down 79. what the heck? no one ever promised it would go straight up. >> i have to take a difference. i don't think there's anything today you can just buy and hold for ten years. the have to do your homework and
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watch these things. you have to invest in the fundamentals. sometimes a change, and when they do you have to get out. charles: as the point. fundamentals can change. >> absolutely. you have to pick your poison, and you will be right all the time. if you pick ten stocks and you're right five times, two of them do nothing and three blow up, you'll be way ahead of the game. if you invest $1 in 1970, somebody told me this yesterday, it would be worth 59 today. anybody that tells me long-term investing doesn't work -- >> i don't know that you can do that with individual stocks. charles: by the way, we're not saying -- you buy a stock. does very well. you selig and buy something else. distil and the market. >> that is really what you're trying to fathom message to try to get across. charles: wrap this up for us. how often should people look to make adjustments in their
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portfolio? >> depending upon their research to do to give them -- and here is the best analogy. if you're going out as a short-term trader, don't go and climb the mountain. if you are a short-term trader, don't hold them long term. when big fundamentals change, like david talked about, earnings a shifting, and might be time to go were just. once a month, some are like that you should be checking a pioneer companies and making sure the news flow has not changed. charles: thanks a lot. stay right there. don't go too far. the panel will be back in about 35 minutes with your marching orders. that's a blueprint for tomorrows. just getting started with this special report, making markets. still to come, how you can make money when america looks in america. getting started is very scary. we know that. we will have to novice investors. i will help them get started. ♪ (announcer) at scottrade, our clients trade and invest
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♪ charles: we are making -- "making your market" here on fox business. especially hard for young people to break into the market. we have viewers with us tonight to say that they want to invest in the stock market but just don't know how. i'm going to show them. twenty-two year-old from barcelona recently graduated as an air and i apple engineer. new york city, two years out of college working as additional advertising account executive.l. yesterday at two young who weree market. no matter what, intimidated and scared even though i showed them it probably could have made
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money.what you want to get in te maet? >> it is the place for ambitious people where every single day is different. as well, every day is a new challenger have to face. it deals with the tomorrow. so that's exciting. charles: i love it. now, here's the thing. at the issue is going to tell me she just wanted to get rich. [laughter] why do you want to get in the market? >> similar. i want to get involved, grumman and portfolio and just kind of explore and have a little fun with it. charles: i love that. have a little fun. people are so uptight, particularly people in your age group. we talk all the time about entrepreneurship being down, marriage being down, birthrates being down. it's just like can people are renting apartments and living
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dated dated day. i don't know. is that something -- and my over exaggerated? >> i think you're right. hopefully you're right. but the starting point should be having fun. and the stock market, and live, in general. charles: on one talk about the stocks that you're interested in. apple, coke, and another company , digital printing company. the daily journal let's start with that. it's a newspaper company. now, you talked about -- first of all, you're young and excited about investing, excited about tomorrow. you want to have fun and live life and want to invest in a newspaper. >> okay. that's why i'm so curious about the. charles: apple, we know, a little worried that it might have lost a little bit of its it factor. >> but it is been growing lately. charles: but it's a long way from where it was. it was $700 per share.
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you think they still have enough pizazz without steve jobs to reclaim that sort of momentum. >> that is the challenge. charles: obviously you have a different accent than i do. >> and from barcelona. charles: coca-cola. probably the most widely recognized brand in the world. >> that's why i'm a huge fan of the marketing, social marketing, absolutely amazing, and it's one of the best brands. charles: always had great marketing. add on know if you remember the polar bears. you're not dealing with any of that pd don't want newspapers to read you one of the things, social media. facebook, netflix, starbucks. is just to keep the engine going did you see how the ipo went down? >> i am a little bit familiar. i'm not fully up to speed. charles: essentially they went
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public. a company offers everyone out there to become part owner. the way they did it was to say that they tried debt squeeze every single nickel out of the deal possible when they did. consequently people initially invested, some of them are still down, some of them have not been broken even. it's our lot of people. i'm glad you're interested. you're more interested in the company and one of will do in the future. >> a lot of potential. is still growing. hopefully it will just go from there. charles: a lot of people saying that because parents, now the kids as saying it's not happening more. my space was the facebook of the world. >> their continuing to evolve themselves. be instrumental in connecting people around the world. charles: netflix. >> the thing that's a very interesting company.
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it has been evolving and changing how people are concerned media, especially movies and television. it's just exciting to see. the setting the seal of companies in incorporations. charles: something very important. they already reinvented themselves. they're revolutionized. they saw that wasn't going to last forever. finally he is sent to keep the caffeine coming. >> don't think that's going to go. charles: if you need colombians to pay for coffee, that all the good. >> i'm pretty sure. it's funny. the only thing, the on stability in the stock market, that's the funny part. charles: cc all of this thing. sometimes you wake up.
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your all-time highs. happens throughout history. per member down 100. later on a nine who will open up an account. my job as italian not to buy these three stocks. by them, add to them. always be in the market. alternately you will be fantastic. appreciate you coming on. >> thank you. charles: appreciate it. later i will sit down with the ceo of united rentals who tells us how the company stock is up nearly 250% since he has been in charge. next up give you my take on companies like yell, shed some light on the two separate americans.
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♪ charles: coming up, my theory on to america's and why the stock market is a reflection of that. that's in just two minutes.
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♪ charles: you know, one reason i am fascinated with the stock market is it goes beyond reflecting our tastes and desires. at times can be a reflection of our souls. we took our cameras on the streets of new york to get a sense of what is in the minds, hearts, and souls of people right now by asking how much we trustor distrust each other. >> as americans, do you find that we trust each other more or less? >> much less. >> i would say more. >> more. >> less what's more. >> more. charles: well, lots of interesting responses. do we trust each other less or
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more? nine out of ten people that we met on sixth avenue right here in new york said the trust people last now than they did before. in some ways this belies the fact the social media dominates our lives and we are so willing to take advice from total strangers on all kinds of things like finding a great plumber defining a great place to eat. but the same token gun sales have never been this brisk and they're is a chronic shortage of ammunition. -ll of this is reflected. we will take a look. this, you can see the 3-year chart. the amazing run at the stock has had, absolutely unbelievable. we know that fbi applications for gun ownership and been through the roof. it's not a new phenomenon. it really has been extraordinary another company that is benefiting from this, alliance technology. take a look. you can see where the stock is made a huge rebound.
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the stock initially pulled back because we are winding down the wars. this company makes a lot of things, including ammunition. you can see this amazing run straight through the roof because a lack of bullets. you know any gun owners out there? ask them how hard it is to find bullets right now. it's kind of a worrisome problem . the commentary on where we are as a nation. by the same token, it tells us that there is a lot of distrust, not just in each other but in the government. one of the things driving this is the belief that may be the second amendment rights of being stripped away. all of this kind of reminds me of a very famous "by president abraham lincoln off. it's really very appropriate right now. stretching from every battlefield to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land will yet swell the course of the union when again touched as surely there will be by the better angels of
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our nature. as the limelight. the better angels of our nature. not saying that gun ownership or making a political commentary, but the better angels of our nature, the fact that we do have trust in each other which is reflected in the stock market. take a look at two other stocks with just as impressive charts. how about facebook. we just talked about that it was somewhat of a sloppy, oddly ipo. however, this recent move underscores the fact that social networking, talking to each other, communicating to each other, people like it. real quick, yelp is another one. we go then to find out all of the good things. another real popular place the people go for advice is angie's west. tomorrow we will hear all about it when i am joined by the founder. i'm calling in the better angels company and a true american success story. we have a whole lot of fun this week.
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i am driving home a couple of points. the rest of the world as a lot more than just europe and has a lot of money and a desire to live like americans have for a long time. the good news is that they're doing that by buying american products. the better news is a gives investors a chance to make a lot of money it was dazzling sales in china has strong sales in japan that offset abysmal sales are here. now, it's not an anomaly. over six and a half billion people trying to move into the middle class which means trillions of dollars in spending in billions of dollars if the profits. that brings us to this, do you know where this is? of give you a few hands. one of the largest cities in the world, 28 million people, and they love the brands that we love to my coke, pepsi to mike ricci, our money, all of america's biggest companies . we sell than $8 billion worth of
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goods every year. consider this, ge, growth in this country was up 25% last year alone. that is a market. i tell you what, tweet me. i will reveal the answer a little bit later on a michele. coming up on "making your market", their mission is help rebuild america and make money doing it. it makes tons of money doing things we could not do without, and you can own a piece of it. also, the most important thing to know when opening an online brokerage account. here with some simple steps to get you in the game. no more excuses, and i have your marching orders, your first rate for tomorrow all ahead tonight on your fox business special "making your market"
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charles: finding the right stocks for your portfolio is not as hard as you think. one of the many corporate success stories that we hopefully will make you more confident. united rentals is the world's largest equipment rental provider and the ceo joins me now with the behind the story of the company's success. thank you for joining yes. i have been an admirer of you and your company for a long time. yet you are not an old company but you have made a major impact. what is the year history. >> thank you for having me. the company started out back in 97, the earlier part of the year a handful of employees put together the company, went public in december of '97 and then over several years, 250 acquisitions. at strategy was about growth and economies of scale and
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consolidating a fragmented industry. then we shifted toward the only being the biggest of being the best. and then recently as some of the talks have had with you talking about what we did during the downturn, which took a lot of cost out. we shifted toward a larger customer. taking a deeper look at who we were serving and what customers really wanted. we took a unique view to looking at ourselves to our customer's eyes. as a result we took about $500 million of cost out, 250 variable and in 250 was permanent. we started shifting our core competency toward larger customers. our growth. charles: what is interesting, when you're talking about people around the country.
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everyone except the government. we'll have to tighten our belts and find out what was important. jettison cost. that way we can be prepared when things done better. we have a chart. you guessed it taken a few hits, but it has been a remarkable stock. one i'm sure everyone watching wished it probably won't. less talk about the future. right now i consider your company to be something of a proxy. in all 50 states. when it's time to start building that seems pretty obvious the companies and not going to go out and buy a bunch of construction equipment. >> i totally greed. what we saw really was a paradigm shift, people shifting away from owning to renting. seymour more of that and a lot of the larger oem some. and so you're right. we saw growth. our and markets were not growing coming yet we were showing substantial growth, not only for
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rentals, with the industry as a whole. a lot of that was because of the secular shift. now we're starting to see a primary construction market. charles: before let you go because we have to wrap this out , how are you feeling about the u.s. economy, all the different things, washington nonsense, the fed nonsense, through all that smoke our you feeling about the core economy in america? >> we see it as being -- shelling legs and strength. for example, in my 35 years in the industry, i have seen every recovery of private construction of really fundamentally coming out for residential. we don't participate in residential. residential is a leading indicator of things to come. it's about 12 to 18 months out before you start seeing the private not raise growth. optimistic. charles: you're a great person to tell us about it.
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an amazing track record. thank you. appreciated. >> thanks. charles: when we come back, where to put your money ahead of tomorrow's open, and we all need savings for retirement. i'm betting that many of you don't even know where they get started. we will get help from one of the most popular online brokerage sites. streisand at three times fast. fidelity investments is next.
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♪ charles: don't stash your cash. tonight we are showing you how to start saving for retirement right away. joining me now, executive vice president of retirement and ms the strategy's.
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you have three bullets for us, and i want to talk about it. people should know that it is easy to a go a long and open up an account with most of your competitors. >> it is. in this started. charles: so many people stop and are intimidated. this is how long does it take and how much information that they generally have to give up? >> the government requires basic information so we can communicate with you. but the bottom line is get started. your hedge investors who were optimistic and confident about the economy. i cannot stress that enough. the greatest asset that a young investor has is time. they have 40 years of their working career to save. and when i look at the leverage a young investor control, time is the greatest asset. the second most important factor is how much they put away their readers but a lot of time focusing on the securities. but if you're putting a hundred dollars a month in your
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portfolio, that will be there. and number may sound pretty daunting, but for young investors if you can start to save a total of about 15%, that includes employer contributions, that may seem like a high number, but it is an important number to begin budgeting. charles: we were talking earlier about investing. the mutual-fund industry, he talked about 20%. to your point, it may sound a little far-fetched among but imagine if people could actually stick to that. but with the outcome be down the road? >> we focused on the outcome. when you get to retirement income you want to be thinking about how much your portfolio concerned. you want to make sure how much you're spending is less than your portfolio is turning. if you're entering into retirement with a structure that is much lower because you're sitting 15 to 20 percent, you're in great shape for retirement. when i asked john investors, if i ask you do your job and paid
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$0.85 on the dollar, which still take your job? i would drive my car a little bit longer, live in a less expensive apartment, figure out how the network. pay yourself that $0.15 first by putting it into a savings account. charles: before i let you go, people who are already involved with retirement and trying to do a savings bank, if they just wanted up 1%, but would that mean? >> a huge factor. their work one day a week, that would basically pay for their brochure bill for a week in retirement. obviously the younger you are, the more impact that has on the savings and multiplication factor on compound interest, but really all factor is put your expense structure in line so that it can help your investing down the road. charles: we should have you talk about this every single day. appreciated. i hope everyone is taking it to heart. season. >> thanks. charles: well, all about helping
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you understand the market's better, helping you make the markets around. if you have a question of want to hear from you. this is what karen did last night. great show, love to have more actual real world investment fundamental stops, when to take profits, percentage cash reserves. i have to tell you, it's a great question. the most critical part of the life cycle of investment. anyone can get it to. one of my subscribers e-mail me and tell me he was unhappy. after reviewing the portfolio i was initially shocked. as i went down, a lot of positions that have actually closed on the mall portfolio. his inability to take a loss or small gains have saddled him with deadweight and fewer funds to take on fresh ideas. now caring used the word fundamental with the word stops. the former reflects business
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circumstances, fundamental. determines the near long-term prospects of a company. the latter is technically an arbitrary number. you don't want to miss it. if you are investing in stocks because you like the fundamentals, you should not use a hard stop. markets fluctuate. down hundred 70 points. the last thing you want to do is sell ownership in a great company because the broad market dipped on news of syria or temporary federally the jitters. if the company begins to lose market share, misses their earnings consensus, sees margins shrinking, those are red flags. conversely, if you buy a stock as a trade to play the market, you know nothing about the fundamentals and an arbitrary number probably could save you a lot of heartache. that number should be 7% depending on how volatile stock is. i think you should always have some cash. in fact right now my subscribers a 25%. i hope that helps a lot to be
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still to come, my stock pick. next hour all-star panel will return with a look at tomorrow's markets and what you need to know the keep an eye on. making the markets after the break.
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charles: coming up next, we have your marching orders, where to put your money to mob before the market opens. dow up 170 points. stay tuned.
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♪ charles: time for your marching orders. the panel is back. everything that may shape tomorrow's markets and your portfolio. with more on this.
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let's talk a little bit more. >> that led to stay pretty close to the day-to-day trading. tapering off. looking man of. 2% rise. the technicals us are breaking down. he still had his the breakdown. moving a little lower. there will be stocks to buy. there will be buying and opportunities. charles: i'll ask you for at least one stock. the day's session and what it means for tomorrow. if you know, i don't sense any panic. you are in the midst of this. you know better than we do.
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i didn't sense panic. >> they work showing it pretty hard. we actually had taken some money off the table well over a week ago, two weeks ago. charles: why? >> we thought it looked tired. we actually started to put a couple of little toes back in the water over the last half-hour. charles: a want to get one. here is the thing. a lot of people have been waiting. this is the most anticipated pullback in history. and the very minimum, 10%. allow people, our subscribers and more than 25% cash. >> of wednesday's call me. charles: what happened to? >> the close was pretty ugly. it just felt like i kept looking for that obligatory upturn never going to get to the end of the day and it's never happened. i agree with what everybody said, probably looking at the week open.
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all see much happening tomorrow. i don't see any date after the judge me crazy. pretty important numbers. charles: the bias has shifted. it would take a lot to turn this back to the upside. >> i don't know that it's going to take a lot, but the big problem is that the issues, geopolitical aside, have not gone away. tapering has not gone away for. dysfunction of politics in washington is not going away. this will weigh heavily on the market. but on the other hand, sell-offs create interesting uptakes. charles: now let's talk. what do we get right now? >> everything a mention leon. we actually started to buy some of the airlines today at the end of the day because we think it's a great trade. charles: we have the down for facebook. halliburton. is that a play on the possible
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spike in oil? >> with like tell a burden for a long time. it was a stock guy picked. and were going to buy. buy more facebook. one stock added not mention was united airlines. charles: airlines with oil prices skyrocketing. >> absolutely. united airlines is down from 35, 2570. he sees me, 2770. i think this geopolitical scare just creates great opportunity because the airlines are in great shape. charles: soon there will only be two or three of them. when it comes to investing, teddy is the man. he won't tell you one there, but not too long ago he was buying seats on the exchange. i thought he was not stiff. he made millions of dollars. i was looking your feet. what are you dipping into?
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>> slowly and carefully and dipping into tiffany. it reported earnings. i am little bit lower, but i am buying more from. if you're going to play in that space, i like the story, the growth, even though the majority of it did come from china and japan. and earnings growth is there and there still raising prices evee more i like lockheed martin. and actually, stocks came off a bit in the past couple of days. a much lower multiple off. the biggest defense contractor. and i think it's not really going to be serious, but there will kick off some talks that might ignite some fuel. charles: by the way, defense airlines have done well. i think it's going to be in a takeover. i do find it interesting, they guy with the most dynamic character on the panel is the most conservative. what you're looking at? >> it's a name leone. we have found for some time. you know, it's the gift the keeps on giving because every time you read in the paper see
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on tv that some 787 dream liner had to turn back, that's another chance to get in. becoming more fuel-efficient and the airlines are a testament. then maybe fuel efficient. charles: you know what i like? after tell you, part of the show , trying to get people to understand. i think boeing is the perfect plan. three numbers, 20, 35,000, and five. $5 trillion. you have to be nice. when you have to be not spirited seems to me like a no-brainer. >> only two or three, maybe for maximum airlines that will have the bulk of the business. charles: making some pretty big orders. >> they are. charles: absolutely fantastic.
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thanks. i'll be right back. when we made our commitment to the gulf, bp had two big goals: help the gulf recover and learn from what happened so we could be a better, safer energy company. i can tell you - safety is at the heart of everything we do. we've added cutting-edge technology, like a new deepwater well cap and a state-of-the-art monitoring center, whe experts watch over all drilling activity tnty-four-seven. and we're sharing what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. our commitment has never been stronger.
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if you have high cholesterol, here's some information that may be worth looking into. in a clinical trial versus lipitor, crestor got more high-risk patients' bad cholesterol to a goal of under 100. getting to goal is important, especially if you have high cholesterol plus any of these risk factors because you could b at increased risk for plaque buildup in your arteries over time. and that's why when diet and exercise alone aren't enough to lower cholesterol i prescribe crestor. [ female announr ] crestor is not right for everyone. like people with liver disease or women who are nursing, pregnant or may become pregnant. tell your doctor about other medicines you're taking. call your doctor right away if you have muscle pain or weakness, feel unusually tired, hae loss oappetite, upper belly pain, dark urine or yellowing of skin or eyes. these could be signs of rare but serious side effects. is your cholesterol at goal? ask your doctor about crestor. [ female announcer ] if you can't afford your medication,
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astrazeneca may be able to help.
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charles: making money with charles and this has ben absolutely phenomenal. taken a look at the five-year charted has gone straight up. these guys revolutionize directional drilling in north dakota with the shale that is a legendary probably up at 24 billion barrels of oil this company 50 percent goes into gasoline production and strong cash flow and earnings trend. looking at management a modern-day wildcats and he has spent years and decades ahead of the competition i think the magic continues
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for a long time by the way north dakota unemployment down at less than 3% because of companies like that earlier i showed you up pitcher of this city to show there is a huge market for american made goods and many of you for best allotted you said to buy or even beijing it is growing quicker than beijing fell largest city in indonesia and the stage manager did get it right. a lot more of you got this than last night. also houston texas was the first to get a right they hope to double the trade over the next five years. we sell them everything, nuclear power plants to apple's in no kidding they discussed a $500 million contract yesterday from our government for military parts. i hope you'll learn a lot.
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thank you for watching the thank you for your tweet sandy males. by the way we will pick one question for tomorrow i am charles payne. thank you for joining me. good night. >> i am sorry rothman. the united states ready to intervene in syria as defense officials confirmed today it is not a matter of if but when u.s. forces will set to strike syria for crossing the red line on chemical weapons we have thomas mcinerney here with the risk and reward to put american forces this area civil war. also of major market sell-off fueled by another military commitment or are investors simply looking

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